Well, here it is. The baby shower is happening now, so I can finally show it. Also, perfect timing, I'm putting this in the Bloggers' Quilt Festival over at Amy's.When I quilt, I like to challenge myself or try something new. My last nephew got my first trapunto and it looked like this:

My goal this time was to outdo myself, and I wanted to try some texture. My brother-in-law and his wife decorated the nursery in a jungle theme so I wanted to go with it. Having those as the only hints, Robot Nephew's mom guessed this when I mentioned I was almost finished:

"I'm picturing peek-a-boo flaps with elephants and monkeys hiding behind trees, etc. Just my guess."What?! Is it that obvious an idea? Does everyone immediately think hidden animals? Are she and I just equally creative? Or is it just the most ridiculous thing she could think of? Either way, she was pretty much dead on. Take a look.

It's about 45" square. It's taller than it is wide, but not by too many inches, it's mostly square-ish. Now that you've soaked in all that handquilted goodness, let's get a better look at some of those critters.

For starters we have a crocodile. I called him an alligator pretty much the whole time, well until that is I googled the birds that clean their teeth; they're called plovers and they aren't all that cute.

The alligator's crocodile's body was my first time using a paper pattern to turn the edges of my applique. I hand stitched him nearly the entire way around wrestling with my little pattern before I realized I should have pinned the fabric to the pattern. Yeah, I felt pretty dumb. I used interfacing for his snout, another first. It's sturdy enough to hold up in the laundry (this thing's machine wash and dry-booyah!) but not so stiff that a kid could poke an eye out or anything weird like that.I used embroidery floss to give him a few details and even gave him a little water line so he'd be in the water not on the water.Next up, the tiger.

Did you find him? He's hiding in the grass. It's actually kinda tricky getting enough grass out of the way for a good picture of him. He could so sneak up on somebody in the wilds of the quilt.

Baby Elephant is tagging along behind Momma. His tail is braided metallic embroidery floss and it's free and wiggly. His ear is a flap and his (interfacing) trunk moves. He uses it to hold on to Momma.

Momma's made the same way, except her tail is sewn down. You know, so baby can reach it. Can you see the wrinkliness of their bodies? It turned out really nicely. They are flannel by the way, and really cozy.

The trees are made of corduroy and pieced with the inner jungle batik. I made a couple of them with interfacing inside and sewed them down funny to get some more depth and texture on them. They turned out nicely. And, not planned but I wish I was smart enough to have thought of it, the wale of the corduroy is occasionally going in the opposite direction. The trees look slightly different shades of brown. Even more depth in my jungle.Now for more hidden animals.

Can you find him? There's his tail.

There he is, the leopard. He's raw edge applique. Remember I was going for texture. My favorite thing about the leopard is totally braggy. I didn't use a pattern for his shape or anything, I just took some scissors to the fabric and he turned out great. I love his shoulders! He has eyes you just can't really see them. Is he looking at you? I don't know. May be best to avoid sudden movements.

The gibbon gave me a little trouble. My first attempt was just a general brown nondescript monkey. It was awful. I was so tempted to cut off its tail and add a loin cloth. I could have done it, too. These parents would have totally accepted a little Tarzan in their quilt. But no, I swapped monkey for gibbon and it was probably a good decision. It was certainly the more reasonable.

I left the vines loose, well sewn on the ends of course, but loose. I tried a few different ideas of them, but went with a tight roll lengthwise. The rolled edges are left raw and will fray nicely. Texture, texture, texture.He has lots of vines down there for swinging. Technically he can't leave his own vine, but his hand is a buttonhole, he can swing around on his. See? He's not sewn down really anywhere.

So this next one doesn't live in an Asian jungle. I really wanted to include a colorful bird and could have done a hornbill, but I wanted more color. Without really giving details, I found out that the nursery jungle is "mythical." It's basically a South American rain forest with elephants in it. As long as I wasn't the one destroying the realism, I had no problem putting in a toucan.Now let's be clear, I don't embroider. If you do, feel free to call your husband into the room to laugh at my toucan, but know this, I tried. I even googled stitches. I used that stitch for making leaves to make his tail. It doesn't show up too well in the pic, but his tail is loose. It flaps around.

I made the snake out of ric rac. He ended up a bit cutesy, but considering the trunks and snout are cuted up with buttons, a ric rac snake is fine. I gave him colored banding. I put yellow next to red because I think that's poisonous. Something about next to black a friend of Jack... I don't know, I'm not a cowboy.

The grass is batik fabric layered with flannel and cut into fringe. It's texture on steroids. I also really like how the grass extends out of the frame and falls over the binding.

The leaves stick out a little but not too much. The field of grass is a few layers of my grass mess. They are staggered and overlapped and just all over the place. I love the grass.

The canopy is leaves of a batik ferny print backed with a solidish green. I sewed them into leaf shapes, complete with veins, and then pinking sheared the edges. They are sewn in layers and each layer can be lifted and show it's opposite fabric.﻿

The backing and binding is a crazy animal print that's essentially velour. It's like fur on a "realistic" stuffed animal. It has this crazy zig zag stripe nap to it. It's pretty ridiculous. My husband picked it out and I thought, why not? It is his brother's kid after all, and I had already vetoed a pastel baby animal fleece with savannah animals in a jungle that I know he loves. Really, he suggests it all the time.I made the binding a few inches wide to be more like a frame than a clashing attention grabbing binding. I think it does a good job of framing rather than distracting.

Remember I was going for texture, here's the texture for a little one.﻿

I think I certainly outdid myself, so goal met. It was the first time I used batik fabric and I think it was the perfect choice for the jungle. A solid would have made it all too cutesy and juvineille; I don't do babyish even if it is for a baby. I love the texture of the grass, seriously I could run my hands through the grass all day. This quilt was extra fun in the making as I didn't measure anything! It was a total mathless quilt and it didn't turn out a disaster. The only bummer of the whole thing is my beautiful shoreline. There is gorgeous curved piecing where the river reaches the lake/swamp thing. Gorgeous! And no one will ever see it because of the grass. Seriously, you can't even peek between the grass layers for a glimpse. But now we all know it's there, and we can bask in the knowledge.And here's why I call it impractical: you totally can't wrap a baby in it. Like at all. It will be great for tummy time, and my four year old loves it, but still, impractical for a newborn. Although can't you just see a teensy one gumming those elephant ears?The baby shower is happening now, I hope they weren't expecting anything practical. My mother-in-law made them a baby blanket, I'm depending on her to give them something they can wrap a kid in!

VERY VERY cute!! Hopefully the recipient will know that you can't use it for the baby. Maybe as a wall hanging in the baby room. I recently made a baby quilt for a gal at our church. After receiving it she told me it would be a great quilt to put on the floor!!! I'm not even sure she knew that I made it :-( Oh well!

Once again, I'm loving the amazingness of this quilt! I've got a brand new nephew, and a nephew who's due any day now ... my quilts for them are (going to be) sweet, but nowhere near this awesome! Great job!